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The Weather Board with the hottest day of the year reading (38.7)
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Home News Garden news Cambridge University Botanic Garden records highest ever UK temperature
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Cambridge University Botanic Garden records highest ever UK temperature

Met Office confirm 38.7 degree C recording taken at the Garden 25 July 2019, is the highest ever temperature officially recorded in the UK.

29 July 2019

The Met Office confirmed  today, the 38.7 degree C recording taken at Cambridge University Botanic Garden (CUBG) on Thursday 25 July has become the highest temperature officially recorded in the UK.

John Kapor and Katie Martyr with the reading, recorded by Katie Martyr.
CUBG's weather team, John Kapor and Katie Martyr Click for information

Cambridge University Botanic Garden Director, Beverley Glover says: “We are really pleased that our careful recording of the weather, something that we’ve been doing every day for over 100 years at the Botanic Garden, has been useful to the Met Office in defining the scale of this latest heatwave. Our long history of weather recording is very important to researchers analysing climate change. However, we can’t help but feel dismay at the high temperature recorded and the implication that our local climate is getting hotter, with inevitable consequences for the plants and animals around us.”

We can’t help but feel dismay at the high temperature recorded and the implication that our local climate is getting hotter, with inevitable consequences for the plants and animals around us.

Beverley Glover Director, Cambridge University Botanic Garden
Katie Martyr
Katie checks readings daily inside the Garden's Stevenson screen Click for information
Showing the 38.7 degree C reading. The readings are taken over 24 hrs and recorded by Katie the following morning. Click for information
The Weather Station on the hottest day.
The Garden's weather station is based in the Experimental plots Click for information
Digital 38.7 degree C reading
Digital 38.7 degree C reading Click for information
Katie Martyr getting her reading verified.
Katie with Met Office's Phil Johnson carrying out the climate inspection Click for information

The Met Office received the provisional recording of 38.7 degrees C from CUBG’s Met Office daily reader and Experimental Section Assistant, Katie Martyr, on Friday 25 July.

Katie records the Botanic Garden’s weather readings from the previous 24 hours early each morning before forwarding the information onto the Met Office.  Katie says: “When I scrolled through the recordings on Friday morning, I saw straight away the temperature increase and the high reading but never in my wildest dreams did I think it would be the ‘highest ever’ moment.”

She continues: “It was a bittersweet moment, as although it was exciting, I was also shocked by the result and the potential environmental consequences.”

On Monday afternoon, Phil Johnson, SE England Met Office Regional Network Manager, carried out a climate inspection at the Garden’s weather station to verify the reading. This included checking the weather station instruments against Met Office precision equipment. Based on his report, the Met Office have confirmed the 38.7 degree C recording is now officially the highest temperature ever recorded in the UK. This figure exceeds the previous record of 38.5°C recorded in Faversham, Kent, in August 2003.

Beverley continues: “It did feel incredibly hot in the Garden on Thursday. We had to close our Glasshouses, because they were too hot to bear, and we sent our horticultural team home early because they were all melting. It was noticeable that our visitors were all hiding in the shade, or else eating ice-creams in our Café!”

The hottest day
Garden staff cool down in a bucket of cold water! Click for information

Meteorological records have been kept at the Garden since 1904.  These include rainfall, air and ground temperature, relative humidity, wind speed and cloud cover which are all recorded at the weather station in the Garden’s Research plots.  All the details are recorded in the Garden’s weather recording book and sent to the Met Office digitally to support national weather records. They are then put on the Botanic Garden’s weatherboard.

Analysis of the Garden’s weather records show that over the last 100 years our average temperature has risen by 1.2 celsius and the hottest day, highest monthly and yearly average have all occurred within the last 20 years. The highest ever temperature recorded at the Garden before this new record was 36.9 C, recorded on 10 August, 2003.

Large parts of central and western Europe last week recorded exceptionally high temperatures last week and the Met Office say that the UK joins Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands in breaking national temperature records.

Cambridge is the driest region of the UK with a 30-year average annual rainfall of just 557mm – which compares with a UK 30-year average annual of around 1150mm, making CUBG the driest Botanic Garden in the UK.

Beverley continues: “Our driest year since we started recording was in 1996 when just under 400mm of rain fell.  Last year we had another incredibly dry and challenging summer, and to have  experienced the intense heat and storms this summer really highlights how dynamic the climate is.  As our Head of Horticulture Sally Petitt says, recording the highest UK temperature serves as a further reminder that we all need to be taking climate change and its impacts seriously.”

 

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Met Office: New official highest temperature in UK confirmed

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